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Tourism drop hits Swiss rail passenger count

For the first time in years, Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) has recorded a drop in passengers.

Tourism drop hits Swiss rail passenger count
Photo: SBB

The state-owned railway said it recorded 8.5 billion passenger-kilometres in the first half of 2012, compared to 8.7 billion in the same period a year earlier.

A passenger-kilometre is a way of measuring performance by multiplying the number of passengers by the distance travelled.

Profit from the passenger sector fell by a third to 65 million francs, according to information confirmed by SBB after reports by Sunday newspapers Le Matin Dimanche and SonntagsZeitung.

The rail company attributed the reduction in passengers — more than two percent from the figures provided — to the ongoing slowdown in the tourism sector.

SBB spokesman Reto Schärli said regional traffic remained stable while rail travel for pleasure dipped nationally.

Steady sales of rail passes indicate that customers continue to count on the train to make daily trips, Schärli said.

“Sales of half-fare cards and general (annual) passes increased, even though the costs for these increased,” he said.

No precise details of the increases were released.

The SBB is set to publish official results for the first six months of the year on Wednesday.

The rail company said it carried an average of almost a million passengers a day in 2011, a 2.7 percent increase over the previous year.

(Incorrect passenger-kilometre figures were provided in an earlier version of this article.)

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TRAVEL

Could Oslo-Copenhagen overnight train be set for return?

A direct overnight rail service between the Norwegian and Danish capitals has not operated since 2001, but authorities in Oslo are considering its return.

Norway’s transport minister Knut Arild Hareide has asked the country’s railway authority Jernbanedirektoratet to investigate the options for opening a night rail connection between Oslo and Copenhagen.

An answer is expected by November 1st, after which the Norwegian government will decide whether to go forward with the proposal to directly link the two Nordic capitals by rail.

Jernbanedirektoratet is expected to assess a timeline for introducing the service along with costs, market and potential conflicts with other commercial services covering the route.

“I hope we’ll secure a deal. Cross-border trains are exciting, including taking a train to Malmö, Copenhagen and onwards to Europe,” Hareide told Norwegian broadcaster NRK.

The minister said he envisaged either a state-funded project or a competition awarding a contract for the route’s operation to the best bidder.

A future Oslo-Copenhagen night train rests on the forthcoming Jernbanedirektoratet report and its chances of becoming a reality are therefore unclear. But the Norwegian rail authority earlier this year published a separate report on ways in which passenger train service options from Norway to Denmark via Sweden can be improved.

“We see an increasing interest in travelling out of Norway by train,” Jernbanedirektoratet project manager  Hanne Juul said in a statement when the report was published in January.

“A customer study confirmed this impression and we therefore wish to make it simpler to take the train to destinations abroad,” Juul added.

Participants in the study said that lower prices, fewer connections and better information were among the factors that would encourage them to choose the train for a journey abroad.

Norway’s rail authority also concluded that better international cooperation would optimise cross-border rail journeys, for example by making journey and departure times fit together more efficiently.

The Femahrn connection between Denmark and Germany, currently under construction, was cited as a factor which could also boost the potential for an overland rail connection from Norway to mainland Europe.

Night trains connected Oslo to Europe via Copenhagen with several departures daily as recently as the late 1990s, but the last such night train between the two cities ran in 2001 amid dwindling demand.

That trend has begun to reverse in recent years due in part to an increasing desire among travellers to select a greener option for their journey than flying.

Earlier this summer, a new overnight train from Stockholm to Berlin began operating. That service can be boarded by Danish passengers at Høje Taastrup near Copenhagen.

READ ALSO: What you need to know about the new night train from Copenhagen to Germany

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